Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Zincum Zinc
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Multilingual dictionary
Language key
Indo-European
Germanic
Zinc en
Zink de nl da sv
Zénk lb
Sink af fy no is fo
Italic
Zinc fr es² ca oc fur ro
Cinc es gl
Zinco pt it
Tsincu arm
Slavic
Öèíê [cink] ru sr mk bg [cynk] uk
Öûíê [cynk] by
Cynk pl kas
Zinek cs
Zinok sk
Cink sl hr
Baltic
Cinkas lt sud
Cinks lv
Celtic
Zinc fr es² ca ro cy
Sinc ga gd
Shinc gv
Synk kw
Zink br
Other Indo-European
Ψευdαργυρος [pseudargyros] el
Zink sq
Ցինկ [ts'ink] hy
Indo-Iranian
Öèíê [cink] oss
Uralic
Sinkki fi
Tsink et
Cink hu
Цинка [cinka] mok
Altaic
Çinko tr
Ìûðûø [myryš] kk
Ðóõ [rux] uz
Ruh tg
Öàéð [cajr] mn
East- & South-Asia
亜鉛 [aen] ja
[xin1 / san1] zh (mand./cant.)
아연 [a'yeon] ko
Kẽm vi
สังกะสี [sangkasī] th
Zink, Seng ms
நாகம் [nākam] ta
Afro-Asiatic
خارصين [kharsīn] ar
Żingu mt
אבץ [avats] he
Africa
Zinki, Bati sw
Other (Europe)
Zinka eu
თუთია [t'ut'ia] ka
Artificial
Zinko eo
New names
Zincon (ZNC) aen
Earthia dms
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
Bluish-white, brittle metal
m.p. 419.58 ºC; 787.24 ºF
b.p. 907 ºC; 1665 ºF
density 7.133 g/cc (25 ºC); 445.299 pound/cubic foot (77 ºF)
memory peg

Known to the ancients
Zink(e) = sharp point (German)
Named in 1546 by Georgius Agricola, again in 1746 Andreas Marggraf

History & Etymology

ZinciteCenturies before zinc was recognized as a distinct element, zinc ores were used for making brass. Tubal-Cain, seven generations from Adam, is mentioned as being an "instructor in every artificer in brass and iron."

Zinc ornaments with more than 2500 years have been discovered, but should now be considered as alloys since they have composition of only 80 to 90% zinc, with the remainder Lead including Aron and Antimony as impurities.

The reduction of ZnO by charcoal requires a temperature of 1000 °C or more and, because the metal is a vapour at that temperature and is liable to reoxidation, its collection requires some form of condenser and the exclusion of air. This was apparently first achieved in India in the thirteenth century. The art then passed to China where zinc coins were used in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). Marco Polo described the manufacture of zinc oxide in Persia and how the Persians prepared tutia (a solution of zinc vitriol) for healing sore eyes (cf. the Georgian name for the metal).
References to Zinc and brass are found in the lost text Philippica or Theopompus (4th century BC), quoted in Strabo's Geography (XIII, 56):

"There is a stone near Andreida (north west Anatolia) which yields Iron when burnt. After being treated in a furnace with a certain earth it yields droplets of false silver. This added to copper, forms the so-called mixture, which some call oreichalkos."
This pertains probably to the process of downward distillation of zinc ("droplets of false silver") and its subsequent mixing with Copper to make brass oreichalkos (arakuta in Kautilya’s Arthasastra) described in detail in the post-Christian era Sanskrit texts.

The first slab zinc or spelter was imported from the East by the East-India companies around 1600, late when compared with Iron, Copper or Lead. In 1597, the German Andreas Libavius (1545-1616) received from a friend a "peculiar kind of tin" which was prepared in India. He called it Indian or Malabar lead. He was uncertain what it was, but from his account it is quite clear that that metal was Zinc.

Early symbol for ZincZinc compounds were know in Europe. Georgius Agricola in 1546 reported that a white metal was condensed and scraped off the walls of the furnace when Rammelsberg ore was smelted in the Harz Mountains to obtain Lead and Silver to which he gave the name contrefey because it was used to imitate Gold. This often consisted to metallic zinc, although he did not recognize it as such. He observed, furthermore, that a similar metal which he called zincum (from antecedents that are not clear) was being produced under similar circumstances in Silesia by the local people. Paracelsus (1493-1541) was the first European to state clearly that zincum was a new metal and that it had properties distinct from other known metals. He regarded it as a bastard or semi-metal. The identification of Zinc as the metal from blende or calamine (Lapis Calaminarus, mineral form of ZnCO3) was accomplished by Wilhelm Homberg (1652-1715) in 1695.
João Cardoso writes that the term was first used by a certain Löhneyes in 1697. I have not found any information on this person (the correct orthography is probably (von) Löneysen).

Andreas Marggraf Finally, Andreas Marggraf (1709-1782) isolated Zinc from its minerals. He published his findings in "On the method of extracting zinc from its true mineral, calamine" (1746). The metal was viewed as a complex blende of metals nearly until the time of Antoine Lavoisier's revolutionary listing of Zinc as an element.

The metal did not even have a universally accepted name before the eighteenth century.

  • tutenag or tutanego, derived from the Persian tutiya, calamine [ZnCO3], which became the English tutty, zinc oxide. The Person word tutiya is derived from a word that means smoke. It refers to the fact that zinc oxide is evolved as white smoke when zinc ores are roasted with charcoal.
  • spelter (referring indiscriminately to Zinc and Bismuth), likely from the similar coloured lead-tin alloy, pewter, or the Dutch equivalent, spiauter or Indian tin. The British chemist Robert Boyle latinised this in 1690 to speltrum from which originates spelter, the commercial term for zinc.
  • The term zink was first used by by Paracelsus (c. 1526) in analogy of the form of its crystals after smelting. The word was subsequently used for both the metal and its ores.
The word zink is derived from the High German zink of zinke = sharp point (from Old High German zint "a point, jag," from Proto-Germanic *tindja "tine"), the shape in which the metal deposits in the melting furnace. Some suppose a relation with Zinn, the German word for Tin.
Habashi writes that it may also be derived from Persion sing for stone. In Mineral Commodity Report 6-Lead and Zinc (PDF-file) is said that it is derived from the Greek zink.

Variant names
  • Greek Ψευδαργυρος [pseudargyros]: literaly "pseudo-silver".
  • Georgian თუთია [t'ut'ia]: After the Persian tutia, a solution of zinc vitriol.
  • Japanese, the two characters are 亜 = second, and 鉛 = lead.
  • In Arabic, خارصين [kharsīn]: > Al-Ghar = mine, + Al-Sīn = China, thus: the metal from Chinese mines.

Actinium
In 1881 the London scientist Thomas Lamb Phipson (1833-1908) thought that commercial Zinc contained an other metal, to which he gave the name Actinium, because certain of its compounds are darkened by exposure to light.
Chemistianity 1873
NEYAN
ZINC, our valued galvanizing metal,
Has a lamellar crystalline structure,
Bluish-white hue, and slowly oxides in air,
It seems chemically a kin to Magnesium.
Zinc is brittle at common temp'ratured
And at 200 degrees less heat it is mall'able.
J. Carrington Sellars, Chemistianity, 1873, p. 136
Further reading
  • Mary Elvira Weeks, Discovery of the Elements, comp. rev. by Heny M. Leicester (Easton, Pa.: Journal of Chemical Education, 1968), pp. 137-147.
  • Arun Kumar Biswas, Zinc and related alloys: The pioneering traditions in the ancient ad medieval India (on-line).
  • Fathi Habashi, Discovering the 8th metal, A history of Zinc (on-line).
  • James B. Calvert, "Zinc and Cadmium" 2002 (on-line).
  • T.L. Phipson, "Sur l'existence d'un nouvel élément métallique, l'actinium, dans le zinc du commerce". La Nature: Revue des sciences et de leurs applications aux arts et à l'industrie 9 (1881): 243 (on-line)

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